Cheyenne Nation
Race with Buffalo
A story of the Cheyenne of the Great Plains
There was a time when
all the animals lived in peace, when no one ate anyone else. All the animals were the same
color, because they had not yet painted their faces.
Buffalo was the largest and strongest
of the animals, and he was getting hungry, He wanted to be the chief of all the animals.
He wanted to draw strength from all the other animals by eating their flesh. Buffalo
wanted to become the eater of all the animals.
The Human People also said that they should become the chief of all the animals. People
wanted to draw strength from all the other animals by eating their flesh. People wanted to
become the eaters of all the other animals.
Buffalo challenged the Human People
to a race, the winner of the race would become the chief of all the animals. The People
said that they would accept such a challenge, but since buffaloes have four legs and
people have only two, the People claimed the right to have another animal run the race in
the People's place.
The buffaloes consented.
The People chose "the Bird
People" to represent them in the race. They chose Hummingbird, Meadowlark, Hawk, and
Magpie.
All the other animals and birds wanted to join the race, too, each of them thinking that
just maybe they too had a chance to become chief of all the animals.
All the animals took
paint and painted their faces for the race, each according to his or her spiritual vision.
Skunk painted a white strip on himself and his symbol for the race. Antelope painted
himself the color of the earth for the race. Raccoon painted black circles around his eyes
and around his tail. Robin painted herself brown with a red breast-plate.
The race was to be held at the edge of the Black Hills at the place known as Buffalo Gap.
The competitors would race from the starting line sticks to the turn around stick and then
back to the starting line. All the animals, painted according to their
vision, lined up
between the sticks. Among the animals were the Bird People, who would run the race with
their wings for the Human People, and Runs Slender Buffalo, the fastest runner of all the
buffaloes.
The cry was given to begin and all the animals and birds set out on the race. Hummingbird
took the lead, ahead of Runs Slender Buffalo, but his wings were so small that he soon
fell behind. As the animals neared the turn around stick, Runs Slender Buffalo took the
lead.
Then Meadowlark came up beside Runs Slender Buffalo, and the two went along side by
side right into the turn. Runs Slender Buffalo wheeled around the stick, her hooves
thundering, and she pulled away from Meadowlark, who went wide to make the turn.
The animals in the lead passed the late runners who were still headed for the stick.
Meadowlark fell behind and cheered on Hawk as he passed her. Hawk gained on Run Slender
Buffalo, and it looked like he might pass her. Her heart was pounding and her legs were
tiring. But Hawk's wings were tiring also, and he soon fell behind.
Runs Slender Buffalo was nearing the finish line as the winner. It looked like the Buffalo
People would become the eaters of all the animals!
Then, behind the buffalo woman, wings beating steadily, came Magpie. She was not a quick
starter, but her wing beats were hard and true. Her heart was strong. Her eyes did not
wander from the finish line. She never looked back. Her wings were wide and she drove
herself forward with beat after beat after beat.
All the other animals had fallen behind.
Runs Slender Buffalo looked over at the magpie, but the magpie never looked away from the
starting sticks. With each beat of her wings she moved past Runs Slender Buffalo by no
more than the length of her bill.
At the starting sticks, many animals began to line up to watch the finish. Raccoon, who
had fallen out of the race early, had returned to the starting sticks. Now he stood up
between the sticks and put out his little hands for the runners to touch as they passed.
He would feel the touch of whoever was in the lead, and turn toward the winner.
Closer and closer came Runs Slender Buffalo, and some of the animals feared Raccoon would
be trampled. Magpie gradually flew nearer to the ground so she could brush Raccoon's
little hands as she flew past. Raccoon did not move, but stared straight at the onrushing
pair.
Magpie seemed to be pulling ahead. Runs Slender Buffalo leaned forward as she ran to
touch Raccoon's hand with her great nose. Magpie's wingtip touched Raccoon's little hand
and he turned toward her an instant before Runs Slender Buffalo thundered past and he was
surrounded by a great cloud of dust.
All the animals waited breathlessly for the dust to
settle. At last, there stood Raccoon with his little hand raised toward the path of
Magpie.
The Human People had won the race with the aid of the "bird people"!
The Buffalo wandered the great plains and ate grass and mankind became the great
hunters, chiefs over all animals.